The relationship between career anchors, organisational commitment and turnover intention

The primary objectives of the study were as follows: (1) to explore the relationship between career anchors (as measured by the Career Orientations Inventory), organisational commitment (as measured by the Organisational Commitment Questionnaire) and turnover intention (as measured by a three-item q...

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Main Author: Clinton-Baker, Michelle
Other Authors: Schreuder, A. M. G. (Prof.)
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13098
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-umkn-dsp01.int.unisa.ac.za-10500-130982016-04-16T04:08:24Z The relationship between career anchors, organisational commitment and turnover intention Clinton-Baker, Michelle Schreuder, A. M. G. (Prof.) Affective commitment Career anchors Continuance commitment Normative commitment Turnover intention 658.314 Organizational commitment Career development Employee morale Employee motivation Employees -- Attitudes Labor turnover The primary objectives of the study were as follows: (1) to explore the relationship between career anchors (as measured by the Career Orientations Inventory), organisational commitment (as measured by the Organisational Commitment Questionnaire) and turnover intention (as measured by a three-item questionnaire, developed by Mobley, Horner, and Hollingsworth, 1978); and (2) to determine whether employees from different gender, race, employment positions and age groups differ significantly in their career anchors, organisational commitment and turnover intention. A quantitative survey was conducted on a non-probability sample of 343 employed adults at managerial and general staff levels in the South African retail sector. The results of this study suggest that there was a significant but weak relationship between employees‟ career anchors and their organisational commitment. Career anchors were also found to be significantly related to organisational commitment and turnover intention; with entrepreneurial creativity, lifestyle and service/dedication to a cause career anchors being the best predictors of these two variables. The relationship between organisational commitment and turnover intention was significant and negative, with affectively and normatively committed participants being more likely to remain with the organisation (i.e. having lower turnover intentions). In addition, the findings indicate that although gender has no relationship with turnover intention, race, employment position and age do. African, general staff and 30 years and younger participants indicated higher intentions to leave the organisation. Industrial & Organisational Psychology M. Comm. (Industrial and Organisational Psychology) 2014-01-22T11:41:04Z 2014-01-22T11:41:04Z 2014-01-22 Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13098 en 1 online resource (xi, 236 leaves)
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Affective commitment
Career anchors
Continuance commitment
Normative commitment
Turnover intention
658.314
Organizational commitment
Career development
Employee morale
Employee motivation
Employees -- Attitudes
Labor turnover
spellingShingle Affective commitment
Career anchors
Continuance commitment
Normative commitment
Turnover intention
658.314
Organizational commitment
Career development
Employee morale
Employee motivation
Employees -- Attitudes
Labor turnover
Clinton-Baker, Michelle
The relationship between career anchors, organisational commitment and turnover intention
description The primary objectives of the study were as follows: (1) to explore the relationship between career anchors (as measured by the Career Orientations Inventory), organisational commitment (as measured by the Organisational Commitment Questionnaire) and turnover intention (as measured by a three-item questionnaire, developed by Mobley, Horner, and Hollingsworth, 1978); and (2) to determine whether employees from different gender, race, employment positions and age groups differ significantly in their career anchors, organisational commitment and turnover intention. A quantitative survey was conducted on a non-probability sample of 343 employed adults at managerial and general staff levels in the South African retail sector. The results of this study suggest that there was a significant but weak relationship between employees‟ career anchors and their organisational commitment. Career anchors were also found to be significantly related to organisational commitment and turnover intention; with entrepreneurial creativity, lifestyle and service/dedication to a cause career anchors being the best predictors of these two variables. The relationship between organisational commitment and turnover intention was significant and negative, with affectively and normatively committed participants being more likely to remain with the organisation (i.e. having lower turnover intentions). In addition, the findings indicate that although gender has no relationship with turnover intention, race, employment position and age do. African, general staff and 30 years and younger participants indicated higher intentions to leave the organisation. === Industrial & Organisational Psychology === M. Comm. (Industrial and Organisational Psychology)
author2 Schreuder, A. M. G. (Prof.)
author_facet Schreuder, A. M. G. (Prof.)
Clinton-Baker, Michelle
author Clinton-Baker, Michelle
author_sort Clinton-Baker, Michelle
title The relationship between career anchors, organisational commitment and turnover intention
title_short The relationship between career anchors, organisational commitment and turnover intention
title_full The relationship between career anchors, organisational commitment and turnover intention
title_fullStr The relationship between career anchors, organisational commitment and turnover intention
title_full_unstemmed The relationship between career anchors, organisational commitment and turnover intention
title_sort relationship between career anchors, organisational commitment and turnover intention
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13098
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